Shark Week 2017: Simplified Schedule.

7 p.m. — “Great White Serial Killer Lives”
Every two years in October a secluded beach on the central California coast has been the scene of great white shark attacks. Is it the same shark returning again and again?

9 p.m. — “Sharks and the City: LA”
Along the coastline of Los Angeles, great white sharks are increasing and they seem to be hunting out of season.

10 p.m. — “Sharks and the City: New York”
For decades, great white shark numbers were in decline in the waters around New York. But now, seals are back in New York Harbor — can the great whites be far behind?

Wednesday, July 26

9 p.m. — “The Lost Cage”
A team of explorers float in a one-of-a-kind shark cage, 500 miles into the Gulf of Mexico.

10 p.m. — “Devil Sharks”
Across the world, sharks congregate and concentrate around volcanoes and volcanic islands. What is it about volcanoes that make them shark hotspots?

Thursday, July 27

9 p.m. — “Shark Exile”
In Brazil, one researcher has successfully reduced the number of shark encounters by simply catching and moving sharks out to the open sea. What’s his secret? And can this solution work in Australia, where encounters are a problem?

10 p.m. — “Shark Storm”
At various times of the year and in different locations around the world, sharks of many kinds gather, swarm and spiral. What brings them together?

Friday, July 28

9 p.m. — “African Shark Safari”
According to the shark sanctuary in Madagascar, both great whites and tiger sharks are “extinct” in Madagascan waters. So why has a great white shark, tagged in South Africa, traveled 1,500 miles up the African coast to Madagascar?

10 p.m. — “Lair Of The Sawfish”
Experts unravel the mystery behind one of the sea’s strangest creatures, the sawfish, from its evolutionary links to sharks and rays, to its key role in the marine ecosystem.